Wisconsin
Wisconsin Employee Monitoring Laws: Workplace Surveillance and Social Media (2026)

Wisconsin employers can monitor work email, phone lines, and computer systems under the federal wiretap law's business-use exception, and Wisconsin's one-party consent rule lets a manager who takes part in a call record it without telling anyone else. State law draws a firm line at personal social media, and gives employers an unusually clear statutory green light to track vehicles they own.
This article provides general legal information about Wisconsin employee monitoring law as of July 9, 2026. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Consult a Wisconsin-licensed attorney about your specific situation.
Scope: This article covers Wisconsin law on an employer's authority to monitor employees, access personal social media, and conduct workplace video, GPS, and biometric monitoring. It does not re-derive Wisconsin's one-party consent recording rules (see our Wisconsin recording laws guide and Wisconsin workplace recording laws guide) or GPS law generally outside the employment context (see our Wisconsin GPS tracking laws guide).
The Federal Baseline: the "Ordinary Course of Business" Exception
Wisconsin's starting point for any workplace monitoring question is federal, not state, law. Title I of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act makes it unlawful to intentionally intercept wire, oral, or electronic communications without consent, 18 U.S.C. sections 2510-2523, but the statute carves out a broad exception for the owner of a communications system. Under 18 U.S.C. section 2511(2)(a)(i), a provider of a wire or electronic communication service, a category courts have extended to employers who own the phone, email, and computer systems their staff use, may intercept communications on that system in the ordinary course of business.
The leading case applying this exception is Watkins v. L.M. Berry & Co., 704 F.2d 577 (11th Cir. 1983), where an employer monitored a sales line as part of a standing training program. The court held that once a monitored call is determined to be personal rather than business-related, the employer's ordinary-course exception generally ends, and continued listening can create liability.
The federal exception matters most where the employer is not itself a participant, such as automated review of stored email or internet-activity logs; a participating manager can already record under Wisconsin's own one-party consent rule, Wis. Stat. section 968.31(2)(c), which disappears only if the recording is made for a criminal, tortious, or "other injurious" purpose, a broader carve-out than the plain federal standard.
Does Wisconsin Require Notice Before Electronic Monitoring?
No. Connecticut, Delaware, New York, and (starting in 2026) Maine require employers to give employees written or posted notice before monitoring phone, email, or internet use on the job. Wisconsin has not enacted a comparable statute, so a Wisconsin employer can generally monitor employer-owned systems relying on the federal ordinary-course exception, without a state-mandated notice step.
That does not make notice legally irrelevant. Courts weighing whether an employee had a reasonable expectation of privacy, relevant to common-law invasion-of-privacy claims, often look at whether the employer published a monitoring policy the employee acknowledged. A written policy will not satisfy a statute Wisconsin does not have, but it is the practical way employers document that monitoring occurred in the ordinary course of business rather than as a targeted intrusion.
Wisconsin's Social Media Privacy Law for Employees
Wisconsin's one genuinely state-specific employee-monitoring statute is the Wisconsin Social Media Protection Act, Wis. Stat. section 995.55, signed in 2014. It prohibits an employer from requesting or requiring an employee or job applicant to disclose access information, such as a username or password, for a "personal Internet account," or from otherwise requiring the employee to grant access to or allow observation of that account. A personal Internet account is one created and used exclusively for personal communications, covering typical social media platforms.

The statute has a real exception: an employer can require access, though still not the underlying password, when it has reasonable cause to believe there has been an unauthorized transfer of proprietary or confidential information to that account. It separately allows employers to restrict an employee's access to certain internet sites while using an employer-supplied device or network, and bars discharging, disciplining, or otherwise discriminating against an employee for exercising rights under the statute.
An employee or applicant who believes an employer violated section 995.55 files a complaint with the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development's Equal Rights Division. The Division processes those complaints using the same procedure as employment discrimination complaints under Wis. Stat. section 111.39, rather than through a standalone small-claims or civil-penalty mechanism.
Video and Audio Surveillance in Wisconsin Workplaces
Wisconsin has no employment-specific video-surveillance notice statute, and courts have said plainly that Wisconsin law does not require notifying employees before installing workplace cameras. The practical limit comes from Wisconsin's voyeurism statute, Wis. Stat. section 942.08, a Class A misdemeanor for knowingly installing or using a surveillance device in a private place, defined as somewhere a person may reasonably expect to be safe from observation, to view a nude or partially nude person without consent. It escalates to a Class I felony for recording under clothing without consent, and whenever the victim is under 18.
Cameras in common work areas, sales floors, warehouses, and entrances are generally permissible, since employees lack a reasonable expectation of privacy there. Restrooms and locker rooms are different, and an employer camera there faces the same exposure under section 942.08 as anyone else's. Audio recording of employees is governed separately by Wisconsin's one-party consent rule under Wis. Stat. section 968.31; recording conversations, as opposed to reviewing stored business communications, needs the consent structure that statute requires. Our Wisconsin workplace recording guide covers an employee's own right to record at work in depth.
GPS and Vehicle Tracking of Wisconsin Employees
Wisconsin is unusual in this cluster because its tracking-device statute directly addresses employer vehicle tracking. Wis. Stat. section 940.315 makes it a Class A misdemeanor to place a GPS device on a vehicle owned or leased by another person without consent, or to obtain location data from a device placed without consent. One of its listed exceptions is written for exactly this situation: it does not apply to an employer or business owner tracking a motor vehicle it owns, leases, or assigns for an employee's use.
A Wisconsin employer generally needs no special permission and faces no notice requirement to GPS track a vehicle it owns or leases and assigns to an employee. The analysis changes for an employee's personal vehicle, which the employer neither owns nor leases, so tracking it without consent falls back within the general prohibition. See our Wisconsin GPS tracking laws guide for the statute's other exceptions, including law enforcement, lienholders, and parents tracking minors.
Biometric Monitoring: Time Clocks and Wisconsin's Breach Notification Law
Illinois' Biometric Information Privacy Act, 740 ILCS 14, is the strongest biometric law nationally, requiring written consent before collection and creating a private right of action, but it does not apply outside Illinois, and Wisconsin has no biometric consent statute of its own. Wisconsin employers who also operate in Illinois should note BIPA can still reach them there.

Wisconsin's main biometric-adjacent statute is its data breach notification law, Wis. Stat. section 134.98, which defines protected personal information to include biometric data such as fingerprints, voiceprints, and retina or iris images, plus DNA profiles. That statute requires notice to affected residents within 45 days of a qualifying breach, but creates no consent requirement before an employer collects biometric data, and no private right of action for a mishandled time clock outside the breach context. A broader bill requiring opt-in biometric consent (2025 Assembly Bill 172/Senate Bill 166) has been introduced but not enacted. Wisconsin employees are, practically speaking, protected mainly by employer policy and common-law privacy claims. See our Wisconsin biometric privacy guide for the breach-notification rules.
What Wisconsin Employees Can Do About Monitoring Concerns
An employee who believes an employer crossed a legal line has options depending on the facts. A demand for social media access, or retaliation for refusing one, can support a complaint with the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development's Equal Rights Division under Wis. Stat. section 995.55. A camera in a restroom, locker room, or other private space can support both a report under Wisconsin's voyeurism statute and a civil invasion-of-privacy claim.
Monitoring tied to a protected characteristic, retaliation for a workers' compensation claim, or interference with NLRA-protected concerted activity may also fall under the Equal Rights Division or the National Labor Relations Board instead. Because Wisconsin's monitoring rules are split across several distinct sources, keep records (dates, what was monitored, any written policy) and consult a Wisconsin-licensed employment attorney rather than assume a single statute covers the situation. For the broader 50-state picture, see our Employee Monitoring Laws by State hub and our general US recording laws guide.
More Wisconsin Laws
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- Wisconsin Child Support Laws
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Disclaimer
This article provides general legal information about Wisconsin employee monitoring law as of July 9, 2026. It is not a substitute for individualized legal advice. Employment monitoring disputes often involve overlapping statutes, employer policy, and federal law, and outcomes depend on specific facts. Readers should consult an attorney licensed in Wisconsin for advice about a particular situation.
Related articles
- Employee Monitoring Laws by State
- Wisconsin Recording Laws
- Wisconsin Workplace Recording Laws
- Wisconsin GPS Tracking Laws
- Wisconsin Biometric Privacy Laws
- US Recording Laws by State

Last updated: July 9, 2026. Statutes cited reflect their in-force version as of that date.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can my employer read my work email in Wisconsin?
Generally yes, once the email is on an employer-owned system. Wisconsin has no state notice statute for general [electronic monitoring](/types-of-ankle-monitors-do-you-have-to-pay-for-an-ankle-monitor), so employers typically rely on the federal ordinary-course-of-business exception in 18 U.S.C. section 2511(2)(a)(i) to review company email and internet use.
Can my employer ask for my Facebook or Instagram password in Wisconsin?
No, not for a personal account. The Wisconsin Social Media Protection Act, Wis. Stat. section 995.55, prohibits requiring or requesting access to a personal internet account, except when the employer has reasonable cause to believe the account was used to transfer the employer's proprietary or confidential information without authorization.
Does Wisconsin law require my employer to tell me I'm being monitored?
Not by a dedicated statute. Unlike Connecticut, Delaware, New York, and Maine, Wisconsin has not enacted a general electronic-monitoring notice law, so no state-mandated written or posted notice is required before monitoring employer-owned systems, including workplace video cameras.
Can my [employer GPS](/us-laws/gps-tracking-laws) track a company vehicle I drive in Wisconsin?
Yes. Wis. Stat. section 940.315 expressly exempts an employer or business owner tracking a motor vehicle it owns, leases, or assigns to an employee for work, so no consent or special notice is required for that vehicle.
Can my employer put a camera in a Wisconsin workplace restroom or locker room?
No. Wisconsin's voyeurism statute, Wis. Stat. section 942.08, prohibits installing or using a surveillance device in a private place to observe a nude or partially nude person without consent, and this applies to employer-installed cameras just as it applies to anyone else.
Can my Wisconsin employer require a fingerprint scan for the time clock?
There is no Illinois-style biometric consent statute in Wisconsin. Wisconsin's breach notification law, Wis. Stat. section 134.98, covers biometric data only in the event of a data breach, not as a general consent requirement, so employees generally rely on employer policy and common-law privacy claims.
What can I do if my Wisconsin employer violates the social media privacy law?
An employee or applicant can file a complaint with the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development's Equal Rights Division under Wis. Stat. section 995.55, which processes the complaint the same way as an employment discrimination charge under section 111.39.
Can I record my boss or an HR meeting in Wisconsin?
Yes. As a one-party consent state under Wis. Stat. section 968.31(2)(c), you can record any conversation you participate in at work without telling anyone else, as long as your purpose is not criminal, tortious, or otherwise injurious. Company no-recording policies may still lead to discipline for a policy violation even though the recording itself is legal.
Sources and References
- Wis. Stat. § 995.55, Internet privacy protection (Wisconsin Social Media Protection Act)(docs.legis.wisconsin.gov).gov
- Wis. Stat. § 940.315, Global positioning devices (employer/business-owner vehicle exception)(docs.legis.wisconsin.gov).gov
- Wis. Stat. § 968.31, Electronic surveillance control law (one-party consent at subsection (2)(c))(docs.legis.wisconsin.gov).gov
- Wis. Stat. § 942.08, Invasion of privacy (surveillance devices in private places)(docs.legis.wisconsin.gov).gov
- Wis. Stat. § 134.98, Notice of unauthorized acquisition of personal information (biometric data and DNA profiles)(docs.legis.wisconsin.gov).gov
- Wis. Stat. § 111.39, Complaints; investigation; hearings (procedure applied to section 995.55 complaints)(docs.legis.wisconsin.gov).gov
- 18 U.S.C. § 2511(2)(a)(i), exception for interception of communications in the ordinary course of business(law.cornell.edu).gov
- Watkins v. L.M. Berry & Co., 704 F.2d 577 (11th Cir. 1983)(law.resource.org)